Congress president Mallikarjun Kharge penned a deeply emotional letter on Saturday to Amneet Kumar, the grieving wife of Haryana IPS officer ADGP V.Y. Puran Kumar, who tragically died by suicide at his Chandigarh residence. The eight-page missive, laced with sorrow and resolve, flags the incident as a stark manifestation of "biased and discriminatory mindsets," urging swift justice for the family amid allegations of caste-based harassment.
Puran Kumar, a dedicated Haryana-cadre officer, ended his life on Wednesday by shooting himself with his service weapon, leaving behind a harrowing suicide note that implicated 16 senior IAS and IPS officials—including DGP Shatrujeet Singh Kapur and Rohtak SP Narendra Bijraniya—for relentless humiliation, mental torture, and professional sabotage. The note, recovered from his Sector 24 government quarters, explicitly held them accountable, with forensic teams confirming its authenticity as Chandigarh Police cordoned off the scene.
Kharge's letter, written in the wake of Sonia Gandhi's public expression of shock, paints a picture of profound personal anguish. "I write this letter to you feeling deeply hurt and shaken, almost at a loss for words," he began, describing the tragedy as a "result of the biased and discriminatory mindsets" that undermine social justice. He lamented the irony of India's lunar triumphs juxtaposed against the failure to shield constitutional guardians from prejudice: "While we celebrate achievements like planting our flag on the moon, it is deeply shameful that we could not empower those entrusted by the Constitution with the duty to relieve the public of suffering and injustice." Extending solidarity, Kharge vowed, "In this moment of grief, we stand with you. The questions he raised will reach a decisive resolution."
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Amneet Kumar, a 2001-batch IAS officer herself and mother to two daughters, has refused to conduct her husband's last rites until accountability is secured. In a formal complaint lodged Thursday, she invoked the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, demanding suspensions, arrests, and permanent family security amid reported threats. Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini, who visited the family for 45 minutes that day, assured a no-holds-barred probe: "No matter how influential the culprit may be, they will not be spared." An FIR (No. 156) was promptly registered at Sector 11 police station under abetment to suicide charges, treating the note as a dying declaration to safeguard evidence.
The Haryana government, under mounting pressure from civil services and public outrage, shuffled Rohtak SP Narendra Bijraniya to another post on Saturday, with sources hinting at DGP Kapur's potential long leave to quell unrest in police ranks. Puran Kumar's note singled out one ally—"only Rajesh Khullar helped me"—amid claims of a toxic culture of caste discrimination that has long festered in bureaucratic corridors.
This heartbreaking episode reignites national debates on equity in elite services, where Dalit and marginalized officers often face invisible barriers despite merit. As Kharge rallies for "decisive resolution," the spotlight intensifies on Haryana's administration to deliver transparency and reform, ensuring Puran Kumar's final plea echoes beyond tragedy into transformative change.
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